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Well.......From what I have read, #4 started out as DSP&P number 67 built by Cooke. It was then C&S 55 until it went to the Milwaukee Road in 1918. http://donsdepot.donrossgroup.net/dr051.htmI thought it looked like a C16, but hadn't compared dimensions yet. Ok, maybe I need two locos. Even though my wife has put up with me and N scale Trains for 25 plus years, she does struggle a bit when I say I'm buying a non running or poorly running brass loco for a couple of hundred, that needs another couple of hundred dollars to possibly ( I say possibly because I have no idea what I'm doing on this project) make usable, for a non existent layout, with no rolling stock or even track to test it on. I can only imagine the eye roll/head shake I'd get if she saw a $450 (Blackstone) loco in pieces on the work bench. That's what I like about this hobby, it defies logic and common sense.Tom L.
What an interesting curiosity! I never would have imagined a 3' line in Iowa. Typically that would be reserved for impossibly tight terrain with grades and curves that dictate the nimble footing of a slim gauge engine... One doesn't think of steep grades and tight curves when one imagines Iowa...I'm curious to learn more about the road's origins, and how it came to be part of the Milwaukee?Lee
One would think that with such robust big brothers, these lines would have been standard gauged at some point during their useful lives. I mean, even the sublimely impoverished Ma & Pa was able to do that around the turn of the century, and as curvy and steep as she was, probably could have done without the expense!Lee